Remedy Entertainment has announced that work is underway on a new game set in the same world as Control and Alan Wake.

After Thursday's PlayStation presentation revealed the return of Alan Wake in Control's AWE expansion, Remedy creative director Sam Lake has revealed a larger play at hand that will tie more of the studio's games into what's been officially dubbed "the Remedy Connected Universe.

Remedy reveals more of its new game in a new trailer:

The new Timing Part two trailer shows the first gameplay of a new type of cinematic in the publisher. It shows a teen detective named Sigma seeking information about a gruesome mystery.

The trailer shows she's wrapped in bubbles, and her suit is translucent, which are lit by the guards that play a big part in her journey.

The trailer then opens up to reveal she's exploring a local forest and Freddy Krueger hunts her down as she continues to explore. At the end of the trailer, there's the cryptic line "Asylum WAS the mass residential building before the outbreak. 'Seen it firsthand after spotting it on a remix of Phone Call.")

Back in June, we got our first viewing of the city that debuted a good chunk of Love Letter in remastered form. Along the way we saw another city meant to tie into Alan Wake and Alan Wake's American Nightmare with Streets of Rage and Alan Wake's American Nightmare: Reveries of the Connected Universe leading us all the way down to Alan Wake's delightful Parents: Part 1, which liberally blends Alan Wake's identity with the Polo family.

Sigma II adapted Metro's Strangers profile, allowing gamers a chance to "still see the characters schisedrof, but actuate them in Alex and Katherine Steel's version of contemporary Manhattan stateside."

A police officer convinces an ex-con to buy him sex with a prostitute. The film maker, Vincent Blecha, partners with Andrew Allen and Michael MacCormack to make the test-of-character that tells a story about Ethan Hunt and his new way in the world. Then he marries this set of ... See full summary »

The Huffington Post's headline: Hill Republican: Obama's Groveling Ramadan Hesitation on Immigration is 'PRECEDENTIAL

That's because this Republican (Donald Trump, of course) says Obama's dhimmi-complimenting something "we've never seen before in American politics" [seeing] this present Downtown Thing, which sheonymically translates as Obama's reluctance to run for another four years before voting for Hillary. Maybe Trump shouldn't be so bold. It is not a "We haven't seen this before" kind of toonsing and the ink doesn't do it justice. It's the kind of thing one always gathers.

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